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i was in church last week and the preacher was telling a story about his brother ,and said his brother suffered from a terrible condition of his ears ringing, and he went to the doctor, and doctor did all kinds of testing and found out he had valve problems to his heart and needed surgery, well after his surgery his ringing went away, and they contributed it to heart valve problems causing the tinnitus.. has anyone ever heard of this?

I read somewhere when I initially began searching about T that certain heart conditions can cause T. I've been having heart palpitations/tachycardia and have seen a cardiologist several times.. I mentioned this to him and he had no idea what condition could correlate between T and heart problems..

I hope this reply helps. I was rushed to the hospital about a year ago for emergency surgery to repair a dissected aorta. Only about 3 out of 100 make it to the operating room, so I found out that I still have a guardian angel. The surgery went well, and NO heart disease. Many years ago, I was a rocker on tour. I definitely acquired my tinnitus from prolonged exposure to LOUD music/ It was bad enough that I needed a bit of white noise to sleep. Since I recuperated from the operation,, my tinnitus has mysteriously disappeared. I have not been able to find much about this phenomenon searching the internet, but I am thrilled!

I hope this reply helps. I was rushed to the hospital about a year ago for emergency surgery to repair a dissected aorta. Only about 3 out of 100 make it to the operating room, so I found out that I still have a guardian angel. The surgery went well, and NO heart disease. Many years ago, I was a rocker on tour. I definitely acquired my tinnitus from prolonged exposure to LOUD music/ It was bad enough that I needed a bit of white noise to sleep. Since I recuperated from the operation,, my tinnitus has mysteriously disappeared. I have not been able to find much about this phenomenon searching the internet, but I am thrilled!

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Woah. Congratulations on both!

I tried to get my physician today to listen for pulsatile or objective tinnitus, just to at least eliminate one cause, but he almost felt offended that I asked because I found out information on the net, didn't at all want to look for any other cardiovascular related problems and basically just wants to let my ENT handle it. And of course the ENTs I saw have zero interest in looking into anything other than my original claim of audio/trauma based T.

Obviously completely different area but it could also be cardiovascular related. It's definitely interesting. Unfortunately I just don't think the rest of us are going to have much success convincing our doctors to open us up for T....

I know what you mean. My tinnitus was pretty bad, and I had given up hope for a cure. I can only speculate at this time. Maybe a long time under anesthesia (5+hours?). I do hope I can find more information regarding this phenomenon, so I can pass it on to help. Hopefully no surgery will be necessary.

I hope this reply helps. I was rushed to the hospital about a year ago for emergency surgery to repair a dissected aorta. Only about 3 out of 100 make it to the operating room, so I found out that I still have a guardian angel. The surgery went well, and NO heart disease. Many years ago, I was a rocker on tour. I definitely acquired my tinnitus from prolonged exposure to LOUD music/ It was bad enough that I needed a bit of white noise to sleep. Since I recuperated from the operation,, my tinnitus has mysteriously disappeared. I have not been able to find much about this phenomenon searching the internet, but I am thrilled!

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That's awesome! I'm happy for you.

What anesthetic did they use to put you under? Ketamine is being investigated in acute onset tinnitus to calm the nerves down.

I just joined the group and this is my first post. I've started to look for a link between heart surgery and tinnitus. I've had mild tinnitus for many years. Two years ago it ticked up slightly but still mild. Last January it started to escalate. Each week/month it would be a little worse until it was a consuming experience. I had an MRI, MRA, cranial angiogram and another MRI. All the while, it escalated. including throbbing in the back of the neck and ears. Long story short nothing showed up indicating a cause.

Then on Nov. 17, 2015 I had bypass surgery and a mitral valve repair including a mitral valve ring.

For three weeks after surgery my tinnitus was about 1/5 what it was and I could generally ignore. It was no longer pulsitile., no throbbing. My normal heart rate before surgery was 60 +/- and after surgery was 95. However, after the 3rd week, my tinnitus started to escalate until today it is as annoying as it was before. It's not as pulsitile, but I've attributed that to a much higher heart rate. Not is there episodes of throbbing as there was before. And it has not yet stabilized at a specific level.

So the question is: why did it suddenly get much better with the surgery, then why has it gotten worse again so quickly after the short respite?

That was the first thing that came up in my mind. I would have expected though for the tinnitus to return after a while. But the noise damage will still be there. So noise induced tinnitus can go away.
Interesting!